MEMORANDUM OPINION AND ORDER
Defendants stand indicted for drug and firearm offenses. They move to suppress evidence and to dismiss the indictment.
Police originally arrested defendants for the indicted' offenses on February 2, 1976, in a room at the Whitelaw Hotel. The police entered the room, arrested the defendants, and seized evidence without the benefit of a warrant. Defendants raised at the time a probable cause issue. Following a preliminary hearing on March 1, 1976, where probable cause was found, the submission of a subsequent polygraph test taken by Starr, and consideration of other factors, serious doubts were raised about the credibility of the arresting officer. The Government then dismissed the complaint on March 9,1976, no indictment or information having been filed. The U. S. Attorney referred the officer’s conduct to the Police Department’s Internal Affairs Division, and an investigation ensued. When the officer was cleared of any impropriety, about December 21, 1976, the police urged reinstitution of the case and eventually persuaded the U. S. Attorney to indict. The case was presented to the Grand Jury on February 24, 1977, and the indictment was returned March 1, 1977. 1 Thus, thirteen months passed between the original arrest and the indictment.
At the hearing on the motions presently before the Court, defendants again challenge the officer’s credibility, suggesting a lack of exigent circumstances justifying the entry, seizure, and arrests without a war *216 rant. In addition, they contend that the long passage of time between arrest and indictment has deprived them of witnesses and blurred recollections of crucial events.
I. The Motion to Suppress
The arresting officer, an experienced undercover policeman, testified that he had the second floor of the Whitelaw Hotel under surveillance having been reliably informed that a room on that floor was being used to dispense narcotics. He observed a line of people with money in their hands approaching a door and handing the money to someone through a transom in return for packets. Having shied away for fear of detection, the officer consulted at the precinct and returned intending to make a purchase and enter without a warrant. Upon returning he purchased heroin through the transom and identified Starr as the seller. Although he had obtained implements to break down the door, it was fortuitously opened by one of two men occupying another room in the suite and he entered along with two other officers. The officer claims that after passing through a small foyer he entered a bedroom where Starr and the female defendant were present with a gun on the floor, and almost $5,000 in cash being counted on the bed. Later a small amount of narcotics was found on Starr when he was searched at the precinct following arrest.
Starr’s defense to the charges is that he only went to the hotel room with the defendant for the purpose of sex. He says the suite was regularly used by another girl and the two men in the adjoining bedroom. He asserts that the money, drugs, and gun found were not his. While admitting to being a narcotics dealer, he claims it was the other two men, and not he, who were dealing through the transom. Starr denies much of the police testimony and gives an entirely different story about the events following the entry. At the same time, while testifying, he repeatedly claimed that his memory was confused.
If the testimony of the police officer is accepted there was clear probable cause, and a warrant was not required under the exigent circumstances existing given the recent holding in
United States v. Johnson,
On the evidence presented to the Court the Government has not met its burden in establishing that the entry into the apartment did not violate the Fourth Amendment. The motion to suppress is granted.
II. The Motion to Dismiss
The motion to dismiss the indictment, insofar as it is based on general rule of this Court requiring indictment within 45 days of arrest, must be denied under the exception in Local Criminal Rule 2-7, 4(b)(3). However, under F.R.Crim.P. 48(b) it is within the discretion of the Court to dismiss an indictment if there has been “unnecessary delay” between arrest and indictment. If appropriate, this dismissal can be “with prejudice.”
See, e. g., United States v. Simmons,
The delay of thirteen months between the original arrest and the eventual indictment was a substantial one, and the defendants objected at the earliest possible moment.
See United States v. Bishton,
The record failed to show that Starr’s memory had been impaired by the passage of time, and he has the aid of the polygraph examination taken shortly after the arrest in refreshing his memory. But disadvantages from the passage of time exist because the two men who occupied the suite with the defendants can no longer be located. The police had their names, and one of them was available at the earlier preliminary hearing. Neither the police, nor the defendant aided by an investigator, can find them now. Thus two important witnesses are missing. Whether these individuals would testify were they available cannot be ascertained. But the case might well have been one where immunity would have been granted in return for their testimony. It is clear, however, that the sharp dispute between Starr and the police officer would make their testimony vital, both as to the motion to dismiss and as to the underlying charges. Thus serious prejudice to the defendants’ ability to defend themselves has been caused by the thirteen month delay between the original arrest and indictment.
The motion to dismiss the indictment under F.R.Crim.P. 48(b) is granted.
. SO ORDERED.
Notes
. Starr had been arrested on another narcotics charge on November 30, 1976, and was on surety bond. He was indicted in Criminal No. 77-0008 charged with possession with intent to distribute 20,810 milligrams of heroin and is awaiting sentence.
